Here are 10 reasons we need strong reform of our chemicals laws NOW to protect children and families from harmful, toxic exposures that are causing many health and learning problems.

1. It is outdated. The Toxic Substances Control Act, issued in 1976, grandfathered thousands of chemicals into the marketplace without any safety testing. And more studies show clear links between industrial chemical exposures to increasing rates of cancer, autism, infertility, reproductive disorders, learning and behavioral disabilities. Of course it is not easy to identify exactly what is causing what, but if we have some data indicating harm, why are we not taking action?

2. Honor the work of the late Senator Frank Lautenberg. He worked for over a decade to bring The Safe Chemicals Act out of committee. He passed away in June 2013, with one of his life-long goals uncompleted. For all of his heroic efforts to protect children from toxic chemicals, let's make this bill stronger and pass it into law.

4. It is time for companies to take responsibility for their products, they are the ones making millions of dollars-- not consumers. We need to shift toward the precautionary principle, acting to protect our society if there is a question of safety of certain chemicals. The onus of responsibility will shift from the small consumer groups and the over-burdened government to the manufacturers themselves to prove a chemical's safety before it goes on the market in a product.

5. Parents are busy enough and face so many daily pressures. If a child's shampoo is cancer causing should not be one of them! Our government exists to protect public health and interests. Clearly, this isn't working. Multi-billion dollar companies use toxic chemicals in their products that have never been tested for safety on our kids.

8. Babies are being born pre-polluted. What does that say about our society? Umbilical cord blood contains over 287 chemicals including pesticides, consumer product ingredients, and wastes from burning coal, gasoline, and garbage.

"Of the 287 chemicals we detected in umbilical cord blood, we know that 180 cause cancer in humans or animals, 217 are toxic to the brain and nervous system, and 208 cause birth defects or abnormal development in animal tests. The dangers of pre- or post-natal exposure to this complex mixture of carcinogens, developmental toxins and neurotoxins have never been studied."

For our babies, for our future, we can and should do everything to limit these harmful exposures.

9. Breast milk is being tainted. We know breastfeeding is healthiest for babies and mothers: it offers many health benefits including protection from sudden infant death syndrome, stronger immune systems, lower risks of breast, uterine, and ovarian cancer, and many, many other lifetime health benefits. But this most nutritious and wholesome food has been shown to contain persistent organic pollutants. These accumulate in fatty tissue and persist in the body and environment. This is not cause to give up on nursing, but is time that we demand our right to clean and healthy breast milk, free of industrial pollutants for our children. The NRDC puts it well:

"The presence of chemical industry wastes in "nature's first food" is a trespass on the most private parts of our lives. Considering all factors, breastfeeding is still recommended, but concerns that chemical pollutants detract from the many benefits of breastfeeding are real. That women are faced with doubts about their breast milk is an outrage that must be corrected by stopping the exposures at their source, not by stopping breastfeeding."

10. Workers need protections. The lowest paid workers, 4 million of them in fact, such as janitors, cleaners, maids, housekeepers, landscaping and groundskeeping workers, pesticide handlers and other maintenance occupations, are exposed to harmful toxic chemicals each day. These chemicals are used to clean our schools, office buildings, state buildings, and businesses. Other workers are exposed to BPA from handling receipts all day, and still others are exposed to a cocktail of chemicals in the beauty industry. No one should suffer dire health consequences from simply doing their job.

Do you have another reason we need stronger laws about toxic chemicals in our products, schools, homes and communities? Please add your thoughts in the comments.

And please join us tomorrow night for the #EcoTipTue tweet chat on Twitter with special guest Lindsay Dahl from Safer Chemicals Healthy Families to discuss the need for toxic chemical reform. It's at 9pm ET/ 6pm PT! Follow @MomsRising and #EcoTipTue to join the conversation!

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